What I always loved about Led Zeppelin was that - at the heart it all - they were just four guys who stood around in a room and just played together. Which I’ve never gotten from the Physical Graffiti version. It made “Kashmir” feel like something that was made by humans after all. On this live version, it’s all about the performance: Robert Plant scatting and missing notes and improvising howls, John Paul Jones playing that imperial forces advancing on the rebels riff on the keyboards, Bonham doing extra drum rolls where they don’t belong and Jimmy Page tossing in little fills for the hell of it. For the first time ever, really got “Kashmir.” That all changed when I saw & heard this version from the career-spanning DVD (called, of course, Led Zeppelin DVD) that accompanied How The West was Won in 2003. So it wasn’t like I skipped it, or even changed the channel when it came on, I just didn’t love it, even though I could hear how amazing and groundbreaking it was. It was like an impenetrable tank that was impossible to get inside of, every attempt at understanding its deep dark mysteries beaten back by a phase-shifted drum roll. On Physical Graffiti it was, as needs be, too perfect. For the longest time, “Kashmir” was the one Certified Led Zeppelin Classic that I just couldn’t get behind. This is really a quick little postscript capping a month or so of Led Zeppelin posts.
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